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Deep Dives
Explore related topics with these Wikipedia articles, rewritten for enjoyable reading:
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Merchant Marine Act of 1920
20 min read
The article discusses the MIB as a key concept with four pillars focused on rebuilding capacity, workforce training, protecting the base, and national security
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3D printing
15 min read
The article recommends using additive manufacturing (3D printing) to improve efficiencies during design and construction
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Augmented reality
22 min read
The article mentions augmented reality as an emerging technology to improve design process and construction efficiencies
Welcome to the Valentine’s edition of Defense Tech and Acquisition.
A new Maritime Action Plan is released.
Transformation success or failure will come down to culture
Rapid Assessments of New Tech is the New Acquisition Way
CNO has some new fightin’ words for the Navy
Air Force Absorbs JFN and Expands Open Architecture Ecosystem
Space Force Planning to Grow its Launch Capability 5X
Startups May Define GD4A Architecture w/o the Government
Ukraine Showed How Air Defense at Scale Really Works
America’s Maritime Action Plan
American shipbuilding capacity has withered, while strategic competitors have expanded and solidified their market share. Less than 1% of new commercial ships are built in the U.S.
With only 66 total shipyards—consisting of eight active shipbuilding yards, 11 shipyards with build positions, 22 repairs yards with drydocking, and 25 topside repairs yards—the U.S. does not have the capacity necessary to scale up the domestic shipbuilding industry to the rate required to meet national priorities.
Strategic competitors, meanwhile, dominate the market and build ships at a fraction of the cost of U.S. production. This status quo poses significant security and supply chain dependency issues.
A self-sustaining domestic shipbuilding sector is critical for national and economic security.
The Maritime Action Plan, informed not only by domestic imperatives but also by international realities, outlines targeted steps to rejuvenate the MIB.
It charts a course to reclaim America’s maritime strength, ensuring the Nation can defend its interests and ferry its trade.
Four Pillars
Rebuilding U.S. Shipbuilding Capacity and Capabilities
Reform Workforce Education and Training
Protect the Maritime Industrial Base
National Security, Economic Security, and Industrial Resilience
Key Recommendations
Recapitalize the Nation’s Public Shipyards. Continue funding recapitalization projects.
Utilize Commercial Solutions. Employ available commercial technologies and solutions. Adapting to commercially available designs will expand the pool of potential bidders, reduce design costs, and leverage economies of scale from commercial production runs.
Utilize AI and Other Emerging Technologies. Leverage AI systems to process requirements, analyze the supply chain, optimize contract language, rapidly identify potential compliance issues, and reduce administrative burdens. Use AI-driven design tools and emerging technologies such as additive manufacturing and augmented reality to improve efficiencies during the design process and construction. Invest in autonomous vessel capabilities to incentivize and expand the U.S. shipbuilding enterprise.
Provide Shipyard Incentives. Explore opportunities for PPP and technology consortiums to share costs and risks in shipbuilding programs. Create tax incentives
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The full article by Various is available on Defense Tech and Acquisition.